Neighbors Stole Six Feet Of My Yard, So I Drew The Line In Stone-mdue - Chainityai

Neighbors Stole Six Feet Of My Yard, So I Drew The Line In Stone-mdue

The first thing I saw was the fence line that was not a fence line yet.

Just three wooden stakes in the grass.

They were thin, cheap, and temporary, the kind a contractor shoves into dirt without thinking much about it.

Image

But they were also six feet inside my backyard.

I stood there in the morning with a coffee mug in my hand and two dogs circling my ankles, trying to decide if I was looking at arrogance or a mistake.

I had lived in that house for five years.

It was the last house on a quiet cul-de-sac outside a mid-size town, the sort of place where people waved from driveways but rarely learned anything important about each other.

My house was not special from the street.

Three bedrooms, a small front porch, a garage that complained in cold weather, and a backyard wide enough for my dogs to run until they forgot I existed.

That yard mattered to me.

I had mowed it, paid taxes on it, fixed drainage along it, and stood in it on summer nights with cheap beer and friends who did not care that my grill was old.

It was not luxury.

It was mine.

Behind me, the Caldwell house had sat empty for months before Ethan and Marissa bought it.

When they arrived, they arrived with contractors.

Dumpsters came first, then new siding, new windows, fresh landscaping, stone deliveries, and a parade of men in work boots who seemed to know more about the house than the people who would live in it.

Ethan Caldwell was polished in a way that felt like a warning.

He wore pressed polos on Saturdays and held a drink the way some men hold a business card.

Marissa had a smile that never quite landed in her eyes.

They were not openly rude at first.

They were worse than that.

They were certain.

People like that do not ask whether a thing is allowed.

They wait for someone to tell them no, then act offended by the interruption.

When I saw the stakes, I pulled them out and tossed them over the back fence.

I did not make a scene.

I assumed a contractor had guessed wrong and that a quiet correction would be enough.

That evening, Ethan knocked on my front door with a bottle of red wine.

He held it low, not like a gift, more like a prop.

“Thought I would clear something up,” he said.

I stayed in the doorway.

He explained that they were expanding the patio, that the space behind my yard was not really being used, and that their layout worked better if it reached a little farther.

“That strip is my backyard,” I told him.

His smile did not disappear.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *